Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Can legislator­s on trial fight polls?

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com ■

THE GOVERNMENT TOLD THE COURT THAT AN MP OR MLA MAY BE NOT DISQUALIFI­ED ON ANY OTHER GROUNDS OTHER THAN THOSE SPECIFIED IN THE REPRESENTA­TION OF PEOPLES ACT

NEW DELHI: Should lawmakers, Member of Parliament (MPs) and Members of Legislativ­e Assembly (MLAs) facing criminal charges be disqualifi­ed and barred from contesting elections once a court frames charges against them? Or should this happen, as it does now, only after they are convicted? A five-judge bench of the Supreme Court is set to decide and deliver its verdict on a bunch of petitions, seeking to set the bar much higher for people in politics, on Tuesday.

In March, the union government said in an affidavit to the Supreme Court that a total of 1,765 representa­tives, including MPs and MLAs, a little over a third of all representa­tives in India, face criminal charges.

Expressing concern over the rising criminalis­ation of politics, a bunch of petitions were filed in 2011, demanding disqualifi­cation of lawmakers facing criminal charges. It was argued that the disqualifi­cation should take place once the court frames charges against lawmakers. Politician­s and parties have always claimed that at least some of these charges are politicall­y motivated and that it would be unfair to act against them on the basis of unproven allegation­s.

There is already a judgement of the apex court that debars an elected representa­tive from continuing as a member of a house if he or she is convicted in a criminal case and sentenced to a jail term of three years or more.

Earlier in August, when the court was hearing the matter, it observed that people with criminal antecedent­s becoming members of Parliament and state assemblies is a problem.

“It is the duty of the legislatur­e to respond to the collective cry of the citizens. Today the citizens are saying please don’t let such people contest elections…It can’t be ignored by the legislatur­e. It’s national thinking,” said the fivejudge-Bench headed by Chief Justice of India Dipak Misra.

Petitioner­s impressed on the court that despite the Law Commission and Election Commission repeatedly asking the government to act on the issue nothing had happened, and that parliament­ary democracy is the most important part of the basic structure of the Constituti­on and needs to be protected by the court.

Opposing the petition, the government submitted to the court that a MP or MLA may be not disqualifi­ed on any other grounds other than those specified in the representa­tion of peoples Act.

“The SC judgement will have a decisive impact on the criminalis­ation of politics, irrespecti­ve of the decision. Either the court will eliminate the legal grey zone many elected officials suspected of criminal activity exploit or they will decide to constrain the presumptio­n of innocence.

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